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Molecular complexity and the control of self-organising processes
Authors:John W. Goodby  Isabel M. Saez  Stephen J. Cowling  Julita S. Gasowska  Robert A. MacDonald  Susan Sia
Affiliation:1. The Department of Chemistry , The University of York , York, YO10 5DD, UK jwg500@york.ac.uk;3. The Department of Chemistry , The University of York , York, YO10 5DD, UK
Abstract:In this article we investigate the complexity of the molecular architectures of liquid crystals based on rod-like mesogens. Starting from simple monomeric systems founded on fluoroterphenyls, we first examine the effects of aromatic core structure on mesophase formation from the viewpoint of allowable polar interactions, and then we model these interactions as a function of terminal aliphatic chain length. By incorporating a functional group at the end of one, or both, of the aliphatic chains we study the effects caused by intermolecular interfacial interactions in lamellar phases, and in particular the formation of synclinic or anticlinic modifications. We then develop these ideas with respect to dimers, trimers, tetramers, etc. We show, for dendritic systems, that at a certain level of molecular complexity the local mesogenic interactions become irrelevant, and it is gross molecular shape that determines mesophase stability. The outcome of these studies is to link the complexity of the molecular interactions at the nanoscale level, which lead to the creation of the various liquid-crystalline polymorphs, with the formation of mesophases that are dependent on complex shape dependencies for mesoscopic supermolecular architectures.
Keywords:liquid crystal polymorphs  liquid crystal modelling  ferroelectric and antiferroelectric liquid crystals  dimers  trimers and tetramers  polymer liquid crystals  dendrimers  supermolecular liquid crystals
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